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Our Activities

Take a look at some of the great activities we have planned for Celebrate Science 2024.

Science Ambassadors at Celebrate ScienceExperiment!

With our Schools’ Science Ambassadors.

Come and meet these inspiring school students with an enthusiasm for science and a talent for getting people involved in experiments. They aim to amaze and engage with their hands-on activities including testing balloon rockets, building planets and investigating slimy stuff!

Presenting a planetarium showPlanetarium

Durham University Physics

Explore the night sky in Durham University's planetarium. Join astronomers on a journey to outer space with stories about the constellations and fascinating facts about stars, planets and what you can see in the sky tonight. Shows last approximately 25 minutes and are suitable for anyone aged four and over.

Children should be accompanied by a responsible adult.

A child showing their painted handsScience and the Senses

Durham University Psychology

A series of fun games for children designed to highlight how important our senses are, and how they work together to help us understand the world. Children of all ages can take part in a series of fun demonstrations involving reaction time tests, a speech warping machine, and the ‘rubber hand illusion’.

Nanobots flowing in the blood streamNanobots!

Durham University Chemistry

Swing into high gear as you step onto the track in the battle against cancer. Take the wheel of a remote controlled forklift truck and go on a mission to eradicate the cancer cells around the track. Power your truck using a unique activation light and discover the incredible way nano-drills use light to target and safely eradicate cancerous cells in the body.

Boys looking into a ZootropeEye Openers

Beamish Museum

Have you ever tricked your eyes into seeing something that wasn’t there? The Victorians were fascinated by optical illusions, and designed a whole variety to entertain. Have a go at tricking your eyes with our examples, and make one to take home.

Example of a fractalReally Big Fractals!

Durham University Mathematical Sciences

Fractals are never-ending patterns that look the same whether you zoom in or out. They appear in nature, science and art, and show how complex things can be made using simple rules. Come and join us to build your own fractal object, and add it to the fabulous designs we create each day. We need your help! We want to make it BIG!

Heather on the North PenninesRocks, Bogs and Bugs of the North Pennines

North Pennines Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty Partnership

The North Pennines is an Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty and a UNESCO Global Geopark, within easy reach of Durham. Get hands-on and find out for yourself how this stunning local landscape is formed from magma to mining and from peat to people. These activities are supported by the National Lottery Heritage Fund.

Girl on a rowing machinePeak Exercise Performance

Durham University Sport and Exercise Sciences

What helps make athletes successful at events such as the Olympics and Commonwealth Games? Sport and Exercise Sciences use a variety of different tests to monitor the athlete's performance and make sure that coach and athlete have all the information required for success. Come along and see if you could be a future Olympian!

Bubbles floating in the airScience All Around You

Procter & Gamble

Join scientists from Proctor & Gamble to explore the amazing science behind some of the things that you use everyday. There's more than meets the eye to many of the items you find in your home.

The universe creatorGalaxy Makers

Durham University Institute for Computational Cosmology

Understanding how galaxies are made is one of astronomy’s greatest puzzles. Join us to find out how we use computer simulations to test how galactic ingredients and violent events combine to shape the life history of galaxies, and make your own galaxy in the computer.

Lava flowing across the landscapeExploring Earth Sciences

Durham University Earth Sciences

Earth Sciences helps us understand natural hazards like volcanoes, earthquakes, landslides and tsunamis. Earth Sciences also play an essential part in finding and developing new energy sources and resources. Join us to try some activities and discover what Earth Sciences is all about.

Examples of mammal skullsBeautiful Biosciences

Durham University Biosciences

Explore Biosciences from the microscopic to something as large as a Hippo. Can you identify an animal from the size and shape of its skull?! Augmented Reality T-shirts that help you to see inside your body and learn about your tissues and organs. Look at those tissues down the microscope and see how they all are made of tiny cells.

Electricity pylons at sunsetOur Energy Future

Durham University Durham Energy Institute

Poverty, Hunger, Disease, Water, Energy, Climate. These global challenges, and many more, need solutions to make the world a better place for everyone. Come and join us to explore effective solutions to some of these challenges. You too can be a problem solver and make a difference.

A selection of bottles form an apothecaryThe History of Medicine

Durham University Library and Collections Learning and Engagement Team

Feeling under the weather? Try the finest Tudor Treatments, Medieval Medicines or Roman Remedies two thousand years of history have to offer. Spin the wheel of diagnosis and receive a cure* from one of our historical doctors.**

*Not really a cure           ** Not really doctors

Warning: cure may actually be worse than the disease

Playing with polarised lightLight Entertainment

Durham University Physics

Light and atoms are all around us, but is there more to them than meets the eye? Discover the physics of 3D films, make your own colour-changing picture and learn how we can use light to identify different atoms.

A girl playing with a bubbleBubbles!

Durham University Chemistry

Why does soap form bubbles? Why do they pop? Join us to investigate the science behind bubbles and put your bubble-blowing skills to the test. We will also learn how scientists use tiny bubbles to coat new medicines to make them safer. See if you can capture a rubber duck inside a bubble in the same way!

Archaeologists on a dig siteDigging Through Time

Durham University Department of Archaeology

Have you ever wondered what it is like to be an archaeologist? Come and join us to explore how the remains that people leave behind can help us to understand the past. Investigate animal skulls and a human skeleton. Inspect bone casts to see what we can learn about past people, their health, lifestyle and diet. Join in with our test-pit excavations: uncover and record artefacts to unravel the stories of the people who left them behind!  

An Antarctic glacierGlaciers

Durham University Geography

Have you ever wondered how our landscape was made? Come and join us to build your own glacier, which have been shaping the north of England for much of the past 2 million years!